21 results on '"Devevey, Godefroy"'
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2. Host Sex and Ectoparasites Choice: Preference for, and Higher Survival on Female Hosts
3. An Experimental Manipulation of Life-History Trajectories and Resistance to Oxidative Stress
4. Neonatal Nutrition, Adult Antioxidant Defences and Sexual Attractiveness in the Zebra Finch
5. Multihost Bartonella parasites display covert host specificity even when transmitted by generalist vectors
6. Experimental assessment of cross-species transmission in a natural multihost–multivector–multipathogen community.
7. Senescence in cell oxidative status in two bird species with contrasting life expectancy
8. Twofold cost of reproduction: an increase in parental effort leads to higher malarial parasitaemia and to a decrease in resistance to oxidative stress
9. Testing the Predictive Adaptive Response in a Host-Parasite System
10. Developmental, Metabolic and Immunological Costs of Flea Infestation in the Common Vole
11. Fecundity and Survival in Relation to Resistance to Oxidative Stress in a Free-Living Bird
12. Female-biased infection and transmission of the gastrointestinal nematode Trichuris arvicolae infecting the common vole, Microtus arvalis
13. Carotenoids Modulate the Trade-off between Egg Production and Resistance to Oxidative Stress in Zebra Finches
14. An Experimental Test of the Dose‐Dependent Effect of Carotenoids and Immune Activation on Sexual Signals and Antioxidant Activity
15. Age-specific variation of resistance to oxidative stress in the greater flamingo (Phoenicopterus ruber roseus)
16. First arrived takes all: inhibitory priority effects dominate competition between co-infecting Borrelia burgdorferi strains.
17. Longevity differs among sexes but is not affected by repeated immune activation in voles ( Microtus arvalis).
18. Environmental stress affects the expression of a carotenoid-based sexual trait in male zebra finches.
19. IDEAS AND PERSPECTIVES Increased susceptibility to oxidative stress as a proximate cost of reproduction.
20. Experimental assessment of cross-species transmission in a natural multihost-multivector-multipathogen community.
21. Reductions in human Lyme disease risk due to the effects of oral vaccination on tick-to-mouse and mouse-to-tick transmission.
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